For more places to hike, climb and explore, and Trails within 15 minutes of every California home and workplace.

Indexed News on:

--the California "Mega-Park" Project

Tracking measurable success on efforts across California to preserve and connect our Parks & Wildlife CorridorsWE POST NEWS THREE WAYS:1. long detailed stories on blogspot (here!)2. short messages on Twitter3. automated news feeds from CA enviro websites in the right-hand column which change frequently and are not archived by our website (that's why we now have a twitter account to permanently capture the memorable feeds)

Friday, February 27, 2009

"ParkScore maps interactive park and health-related information to help advocates make the case for increasing park and open space investments in their communities. "

Parkscore is a website set up by the Trust for Public Land to show areas of California severely in need of new parkland. The website uses the standard of a minimum of 3 acres per thousand residents. By this standard, MOST of California has a shortfall of parkland.

There is another part of the website, titled "park equity", that is likely to arouse controversy however. Unlike the findings of the "park deficit" page, in the first county for which "park equity" data is shown, which is San Mateo County, only a few areas are rated "high priority". Areas that are rated as "low priority" however also fall below the minimum standard of 3 acres per thousand people. So the use of this data can be rather subjective depending on the motives of the user. In Los Angeles, I have seen data like this used to pit one area of the city against another in a battle to see who gets park funding.

For example, the L.A. Times reported on a study by the University of Southern California Center for Sustainable Cities,

which concluded that 85% of the population of L.A. County has inadequate access to parks, defined as the nearest park being more than 1/4 mile away. The study then attempted to show that by ethnic makeup, white-dominated neighborhoods have 20 times as much park space as Latino-dominated neighborhoods. The problem with the methodology of this study, which has been cited frequently by the press, is that it doesn't differentiate between active, usable parkland and steep mountainsides. Most of the parkland in predominantly white neighborhoods of Los Angeles are the mountain parks in the Santa Monica mountains and the Angeles National Forest. In most cases, the only "usable" part of these mountain parks is the trails. Unlike the typical park in a residential neighborhood, most mountain parks do not contain ballfields, picnic areas or any flat land suitable for active recreation except for the avid hikers out there. So the claim that some parts of Los Angeles have vast amounts of usable parkland compared to other neighborhoods is like comparing apples to oranges. In fact, organizations that track the parkland deficit in the USA draw a line between "active" park acres and the more generic term of "open space" which can include ballfields but also wetlands, lagoons, lakes, rivers, mountains and beaches, much of which cannot be used for active recreation.

The facts are that the entire city is below the standard for active parkland, as the "park deficit" page on the ParkScore website shows. The urban areas of California are all in desperate need for more parkland, and so we support saving it whenever and wherever it is available.

1 comment:

The difference between the TPL Park Deficit Analysis and TPL Park Equity AnalysisPark Deficit analysis is a measure of the amount of parkland in relation to the local population. Park Equity analysis a measure of proximity to parks in relation to the local population.

Park Deficit analysis - Computes parkland acres per 1000 residents for each census block group boundary - Highlights areas with less than 3 acres of parkland per 1000 residents - Only considers parkland and openspace areas that allow public access. "Convenience" of access is not considered.

Park Equity analysis - Computes walking distance to each park using sidewalks, low-traffic roadways, and trails - Size of the park doesn't matter. This analysis only considers park entry access points for pedestrians. - Identifies census block groups with greatest need for parks (high density population, high % of children and teenagers, and/or a high % of low income households) - Highlights areas with high park need that are not within walking distance (1/4 mi) of a local park

The value of considering both metricsPark Deficit analysis provides a good general measure of park deficiency across the landscape, but it can be misleading in certain circumstances - The case of no parks: A block group with 2 residents and no parks will receive the same score as a block group with 2,000,000 and no parks. - Distribution of parks: Park area within a block group may not be geographically dispersed. An area with a single 10-acre park in one corner of the block group would receive the same park deficit score as ten 1-acre parks distributed across the block group. - Large passive-recreation parks: As pointed out in this blog, large passive recreation areas (e.g. mountain parks) can skew the park deficit score, showing no need for additional parkland, even though access and/or recreation opportunities to these large recreation areas may be limited.

Park Equity analysis can identify "high need" locations within park-deficient areas. Using Park Equity analysis to further explore Park Deficit priority areas can reveal new insights. - Used together, Park Equity can provide guidance on best siting for new parkland in areas of Park Deficit. - Park Equity analysis complements Park Deficit analysis, by distinguishing relative need in "no-park" areas - Park Equity analysis encourages the consideration of distribution of parks in direct relation to where residents live. - Park Equity analysis can help balance out priority given to large passive recreation areas, by emphasizing access rather than size. - Park Equity analysis takes into account the "need" for walkable park locations that goes beyond population density assessment. Park Equity places additional priority on areas needing park access for children and low income households.

It is recommended that both analyses be considered when assessing the need for new parkland.